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Complex Polypharmacy in Bipolar Disorder: Side effect burden, adherence, and response predictors

Authors :
Noreen A. Reilly-Harrington
Joseph R. Calabrese
Louisa G. Sylvia
Richard C. Shelton
Vicki Fung
William V. Bobo
Thilo Deckersbach
Michael E. Thase
Masoud Kamali
Andrew A. Nierenberg
Keming Gao
Lindsay Overhage
Mauricio Tohen
Terence A. Ketter
Source :
J Affect Disord
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Background Complex polypharmacy (CP) is common in bipolar disorder (BD). We assessed the associations between CP, adherence, and side effect burden, and patient traits associated with clinical improvement in relationship to CP. Methods We conducted a secondary analysis of 482 adult BD participants in the Bipolar CHOICE trial. We examined the associations between CP (use of ≥3 BD medications) and non-adherence (missing >30% of BD medication doses in the last 30 days) and side effect burden (Frequency, Intensity and Burden of Side Effects Rating scale) using multivariate models with patient random effects. We used logistic regression to assess the patient traits associated with remission among those with majority CP use (Clinical Global Impression-Severity for BD score ≤2 for 8+ weeks). Results 43% of patients had any CP and 25% had CP for the majority of the study. CP was associated with non-adherence (OR = 2.51, 95% CI [1.81, 3.50]), but not worse side effect burden. Among those with CP, 16% achieved remission; those with non-adherence, comorbid social or generalized anxiety disorder, or BD I vs. II were less likely to achieve remission among those with CP. Limitations There could be unmeasured confounding between use of CP and side effect burden or adherence. Adherence was measured by self-report, which could be subject to reporting error. Conclusions BD patients with CP were less likely to adhere to therapy, and those with worse adherence to CP were less likely to clinically respond. Clinicians should assess medication adherence prior to adding another agent to medication regimens.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
J Affect Disord
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f89aadb3e3e967f85e05a7835d865139